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TCP Congestion Control

TCP Congestion Control. Tahir Azim. Main points. Congestion is inevitable Congestion happens at different scales – from two individual packets colliding to too many users TCP Senders can detect congestion and reduce their sending rate by reducing the window size

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TCP Congestion Control

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  1. TCP Congestion Control Tahir Azim Courtesy: Nick McKeown, Stanford

  2. Main points • Congestion is inevitable • Congestion happens at different scales – from two individual packets colliding to too many users • TCP Senders can detect congestion and reduce their sending rate by reducing the window size • TCP modifies the rate according to “Additive Increase, Multiplicative Decrease (AIMD)”. • To probe and find the initial rate, TCP uses a restart mechanism called “slow start”. • Routers slow down TCP senders by buffering packets and thus increasing delay Courtesy: Nick McKeown, Stanford

  3. Congestion A1(t) 10Mb/s H1 R1 D(t) 1.5Mb/s H3 A2(t) 100Mb/s H2 A1(t) D(t) A2(t) X(t) A2(t) Cumulative bytes A1(t) X(t) D(t) t Courtesy: Nick McKeown, Stanford

  4. Time Scales of Congestion Too many users using a link during a peak hour 7:00 8:00 9:00 TCP flows filling up allavailable bandwidth 1s 2s 3s Two packets collidingat a router 100µs 200µs 300µs Courtesy: Nick McKeown, Stanford

  5. Dealing with CongestionExample: two flows arriving at a router A1(t) ? R1 A2(t) Courtesy: Nick McKeown, Stanford

  6. Congestion is unavoidableArguably it’s good! • We use packet switching because it makes efficient use of the links. Therefore, buffers in the routers are frequently occupied. • If buffers are always empty, delay is low, but our usage of the network is low. • If buffers are always occupied, delay is high, but we are using the network more efficiently. • So how much congestion is too much? Courtesy: Nick McKeown, Stanford

  7. Load, delay and power Typical behavior of queueing systems with random arrivals: A simple metric of how well the network is performing: Power Average Packet delay Load Load “optimal load” Courtesy: Nick McKeown, Stanford

  8. Options for Congestion Control • Implemented by host versus network • Reservation-based, versus feedback-based • Window-based versus rate-based. Courtesy: Nick McKeown, Stanford

  9. TCP Congestion Control • TCP implements host-based, feedback-based, window-based congestion control. • TCP sources attempt to determine how much capacity is available • TCP sends packets, then reacts to observable events (loss). Courtesy: Nick McKeown, Stanford

  10. TCP Congestion Control • TCP maintains additional Congestion Window, cwnd • TCP sources change the sending rate by modifying the window size: Window = min{Advertized window, Congestion Window} • In other words, send at the rate of the slowest component: network or receiver. • “cwnd” follows additive increase/multiplicative decrease • Initialize cwnd with window size of 1 or 2 segments • On receipt of Ack for a full window: Increment cwnd by 1 segment • On packet loss (timeout): cwnd *= 0.5 Receiver Transmitter (“cwnd”) Courtesy: Nick McKeown, Stanford

  11. Additive Increase Src D D A A D D D A A A D A Dest Actually, TCP uses bytes, not segments to count: When ACK is received for a full window: [MSS < cwnd, except at the start] Courtesy: Nick McKeown, Stanford

  12. Leads to the TCP “sawtooth” Window Timeouts halved Could take a long time to get started! t Courtesy: Nick McKeown, Stanford

  13. TCP Sending Rate • What is the sending rate of TCP? • Acknowledgement for sent packet is received after one RTT • Amount of data sent until ACK is received is the current window size W • Therefore sending rate is R = W/RTT • Is the TCP sending rate saw tooth shaped as well? Courtesy: Nick McKeown, Stanford

  14. TCP and buffers Courtesy: Nick McKeown, Stanford

  15. TCP and Buffers • For TCP with a single flow over a network link with enough buffers, RTTand Ware proportional to each other • Therefore the sending rate R = W/RTTis constant (and not a sawtooth) • But experiments and theory suggest that with many flows: Where: p is the drop probability. • TCP rate can be controlled in two ways: • Buffering packets and increasing the RTT • Dropping packets to decrease TCP’s window size Courtesy: Nick McKeown, Stanford

  16. “Slow Start” Designed to find the fair-share rate quickly at startup or if a connection has been halted (e.g. window dropped to zero,or window full, but ACK is lost). How it works: increase cwnd by 1 for each ACK received. 1 2 4 8 Src D D D A A D D D D A A A A A Dest Courtesy: Nick McKeown, Stanford

  17. Slow Start Window Timeouts halved Slow start in operation until it reaches half of previous cwnd. Exponential “slow start” t Why is it called slow-start? Because TCP originally had no congestion control mechanism. The source would just start by sending a whole window’s worth of data. Courtesy: Nick McKeown, Stanford

  18. Congestion control in the Internet • Maximum window sizes of most TCP implementations by default are very small • Windows XP: 12 packets • Linux/Mac: 40 packets • Often the buffer of a link is larger than the maximum window size of TCP • A typical DSL line has 200 packets worth of buffer • For a TCP session, the maximum number of packets outstanding is 40 • The buffer can never fill up • The router will never drop a packet Courtesy: Nick McKeown, Stanford

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